On 03/31/2011 03:11 PM, NoOp wrote:
...
>> According to this:
>https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/apt-file/+bug/508089>http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=540905> you should be able to even run '$ apt-file update' without 'su/sudo'.
>> I'll try on another system and/or purge & reinstall on this one.
Just installed on another system. Interesting note at the end of the
install (which you wouldn't see if installing via Synaptic) & looks to
be the reason:
====
Setting up apt-file (2.4.0) ...
The system-wide cache is empty. You may want to run 'apt-file update'
as root to update the cache. You can also run 'apt-file update' as
normal user to use a cache in the user's home directory.
====
and not using sudo on that machine:
$ apt-file update
apt-file is now using the user's cache directory.
If you want to switch back to the system-wide cache directory,
run 'apt-file purge'
$ apt-file search gnome-default-applications.xml
capplets-data:
/usr/share/gnome-control-center/default-apps/gnome-default-applications.xml